Ancient/Now
Afterlives of Ancient Egypt with Kara Cooney
Health and Medicine in Ancient Egypt with Prof. Anne Austin
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Health and Medicine in Ancient Egypt with Prof. Anne Austin

Episode #100

Kara and Jordan talk with Professor Anne Austin (University of Missouri - St. Louis) about her book Healthmaking in Ancient Egypt: The Social Determinants of Health at Deir el-Medina, how she uses data from ancient Egyptian human remains to understand health care practices, disease, and illness in the past, and her work on tattooing in ancient Egypt.

Introducing Prof. Anne Austin

Dr. Anne Austin is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Missouri St. Louis (UMSL). She received her B.A. in Anthropology from Harvard University and earned her M.A. and Ph.D. in the Archaeology program at UCLA. She joined UMSL in 2017 after completing a three-year postdoctoral fellowship in the History Department at Stanford University. Her research combines the fields of osteology and Egyptology in order to document medicine and disease in the past. In her book, Healthmaking in Ancient Egypt, Anne uses data from ancient Egyptian human remains and daily life texts to reconstruct ancient Egyptian health networks and identify how ancient Egyptians improved their health and responded to illness. While working at Deir el-Medina, Anne discovered the mummified remains of a woman with 30 different tattoos. Since then, she and her team have identified several other tattooed women, rewriting the history of tattooing in ancient Egypt. Anne’s next book will explore the practice of tattooing in ancient Egypt and its potential connections to gender, religion, and medicine.

Healthmaking in Ancient Egypt: The Social Determinants of Health at Deir el-Medina

Healthmaking in Ancient Egypt – The Social Determinants of Health at Deir  el-Medina | Brill

Show Notes

T/W- Human Remains

  • Deir el-Medina

Deir el-Medina from the eastern hill (© Jordan Galczynski)
Interior of the house at the village (© Jordan Galczynski)
  • Social Determinants of Health

  • Working in Tomb Spaces

tomb-raiding
Many of the tombs at Deir el-Medina were reused over the millennia much like the Tomb of Khaemwaset of Ramses III, pictured here

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